There are no genuine issues of fact and this is an appropriate case for decision by summary judgment. At the outset, plaintiff concedes that he is not entitled to recover from these defendants the $50,000 in punitive damages awarded him in his suit against Officer Basden, and we summarily affirm the trial court’s judgment so holding. The sole issue for our determination is whether the insurance policy issued by defendants provides coverage for compensatory damаges awarded plaintiff as a result of Officer Basden’s acts. The trial court ruled that coverage was excluded by the terms of the insurance policy and by public policy which prohibits insuring against liability for one’s criminal acts. We reverse.
The insurance policy at issue in this case contained the following pertinent provisions:
I. Coverage Claims Made Provision
The company will
A. Pay, on behalf of the insured, all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages by reasоn of any negligent act, error or omission arising out of the performance of insured’s duties while on official assignments as a law enforcement оfficial or officer in the regular course of public employment as hereinafter defined arising out of the following perils: Bodily Injury, including assault and battery (as hereinafter defined), Property Damage (as hereinafter defined), Personal Injury (as hereinafter defined) including mental anguish, false arrest, fаlse imprisonment, wrongful eviction, malicious prosecution, libel, slander, invasion of rights of privacy or discrimination.
* * *
III. Exclusions
This policy does not apply:
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(L) to any dishonest, fraudulent, criminal or malicious act or omission.
*430 IV. Definitions
When used in this policy (including endorsements forming a part hereof):
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(E) Bodily injury as used herein means physical injury to any person (including death) and any mental anguish or mental suffering associated with and arising from such physical injury.
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(H) Personal injury means
(1) false arrest, false imprisonment, wrongful eviction, wrongful detention, malicious prosecution or humiliation;
(2) libel, slander, defamation of character, invasion of rights of privacy, discrimination or violation of Civil Rights, or assault and battery;
(3) erroneous service of civil process or papers;
(4) bodily injury as hereinabove defined.
In construing the foregoing provisions, we are guided by the general rule that an insurance policy is a contract between the parties which must be construed and enforced according to its terms.
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Shelby Mut. Ins. Co.,
*431 In the present case, plaintiff contends that the coverage provisions and the exclusion provisions of the policy are in such conflict as to make it virtually impossible for either an insured or a benеficiary to determine precisely which perils are covered and which are not. We agree.
To the average reader, the languаge of the policy issued by defendants presents an interesting array of drafting ambiguities which, we believe, can produce nothing less than confusion as to the perils for which coverage is provided by the policy. For example, the policy explicitly provides coverage for nеgligently inflicted bodily injury (including death) resulting from assault and battery, a criminal act pursuant to G.S. 14-33, but thereafter purports to exclude claims arising out of any сriminal act. The policy specifically provides coverage for malicious prosecution, but later excludes claims arising out of any “malicious act or omission.” In short, while the policy provides coverage for a number of specific perils, the exclusionary languagе “[t]his policy does not apply . . . to any dishonest, fraudulent, criminal or malicious act or omission,” when applied literally, effectively denies coverage for many of those very same perils.
Officer Basden was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in connection with the death of plаintiffs intestate. Involuntary manslaughter, a felony in this State, has been defined as an unintentional killing of a person without malice, proximately resulting from the сommission of an unlawful act not amounting to a felony nor naturally dangerous to human life,
or
a culpably
negligent
act or omission.
State v. Redfern,
Defendants argue, however, that even if the insurance poliсy may be construed as providing coverage for plaintiffs claim, the
*432
coverage violates public policy and that the contract оf insurance is, therefore, unenforceable. It is a general rule that an insurance policy is void as against public policy if its intent is to indemnify the insurеd against liability for his own criminal acts.
Shew v. Southern Fire & Casualty Co.,
The public policy considerations raised by defendants and served by the foregoing rule are not the only ones present in this case, however. The insurance policy involved in the present case was рurchased by the Town of LaGrange, a municipality which would ordinarily be immune from tort liability. As stated in
Edwards v. Akion,
Insofar as the summary judgment entered by the trial court denies plaintiff recovery against these defendants for punitive damagеs awarded plaintiff in his suit against Officer Basden, the judgment is affirmed. In all other respects, however, the judg *433 ment of the trial court is reversed and this case is remanded for entry of judgment for plaintiff consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
